• When you click on links to various merchants on this site and make a purchase, this can result in this site earning a commission. Affiliate programs and affiliations include, but are not limited to, the eBay Partner Network.

"Water Freedom System" Review

Dibbons

Well-Known Member
Local time
10:25 PM
Joined
Nov 29, 2014
Messages
5,098
Reaction score
6,134
Location
La Paz, B.C.S., Mexico
I wonder why when looking for a real evaluation for these gimmick solutions (in this case, free, clean, unlimited water) all one can find online are positive things trying to sell, re-sell, or glorify such claims. I just don't understand how one cannot find even one un-biased comment anywhere.

Screen Shot 2021-08-04 at 7.17.47 PM.png
 
I saw a system that removes water from the air. A YouTube review. It worked well but had noisy fans. ??? Is this what you were referring to???
 
Water collected from a dehumidifier is essentially distilled, and as long as your coils and vessel are clean, it is safe to drink.
 
So why can't one find credible opinion of the product on the internet? Everything one reads is trying to sell it. It's the same for all of these "miracle" products. How and who are blocking the impartial "reviews", that's what I am asking?
 
If you can't find one unbiased opinion online for these products then I would tend not to believe in the product.
The internet reviews can be controlled by whomever is hocking said product.
I tend to defer back to what our parents, grand parents and great grand parents did to survive before the internet.
 
Bias ?
that's in the eyes of the reader

That's the internet for ya'
1,000,000+ opinions
or as many different ones, as people that respond sometimes
& you have to chose 'which one' is actually true/real,
or the ones that are believable anyway...

Much like cars, years makes models size quality etc.
everyone has an opinion of whats the best or worst
are they 100% correct ?, oh hell no
it's subjective

or opinions are like a belly button (or asshole)
everyone has one

if you trust a certain posters opinion
go with it, it may actually be correct/true
it's a damn crapshoot

--------------------------------------------------------------

I saw some deal where people Homesteaders/family
were collecting moisture/dew/fog (even rain)
on like a huge rubber tarp deal,
from right out of the air & filtering it thru charcoal,
collecting it in plastic barrels & actually drinking it
(don't quote me, Homestead Rescue show, maybe ?)
it was in a coastal area IIRC with lots of humidity/marine layer/fog
or moisture too
I think they got enough to water their little garden too

IIRC they used a Ram Pump/Gravity pump with no electricity
to move the water out of the barrels...

The Discovery Show Moonshinner did something like that too,
from a spring source
they needed to get it/water back up a hill without electricity
I don't remember the episode
of either show



not too sure what you could do in Mexico
 
Last edited:
I wonder why when looking for a real evaluation for these gimmick solutions (in this case, free, clean, unlimited water) all one can find online are positive things trying to sell, re-sell, or glorify such claims. I just don't understand how one cannot find even one un-biased comment anywhere.

View attachment 1148088

I can tell you why.....
Anytime someone is trying to sell something, especially true for something shady and needs to convince people a lot (but not always), these products need reviews. They know a lot of people will search the product + the word "review". So they pay professional blog writers OR 'ad' webpages to post a fake 'ad' reviews. The first 2 or 3 pages of "reviews" search results will be the fake blog posts. Or and in 98% of the time, these are also affiliate sellers. The link in the website is their advertising link to get a commission.
Here's a clear sign:
1. The blog post is saying exactly what the seller says and the post explains a lot about the creator and the item in all positive, kiss-butt talking points.
2. The blog post will have quite a bit of the creators own advertising videos, pictures and talking points. Like it's an ad. It literally is an ad.
3. If you look at the dates of all the listed search results, you'll see the they are all within the same day or so of each other. This is when the creator/seller of the product put out the purchase of all these "reviewers" to post the ad blog posts.
4. Several links throughout the post. Almost after every paragraph is a link to buy the product.
5. The comments section (if there is one) is always turned off. The comments are all positive and even look fake. And no new comments can be posted.
6. It's not only blog posts getting in on the fake ads but it's newspapers too. If a bunch of online articles are being written about something and they are all positive, it's best to wait it out to check the real, organic reviews. I never jump on something new, I wait until the product has had time to generate some time-tested real world people buying it first and see if the story grows bigger and if real reviews start popping up or if bad press releases are hitting the news with customers getting jacked, like with the Flex Tape debacle. Because I also want to hear stories about how customer service has responded and those fake money back guarantees. They post all they want they have a money back guarantee, but if no one answers the phone or their website constantly redirects, then boom, saved myself a headache (and having to file a chargeback).
 
Back
Top